III: 1 - Reproduction (part 1) Flashcards

1.1 Asexual reproduction 1.2 Sexual reproduction 1.2.1 Sexual reproduction in plants

1
Q

Define

asexual reproduction

A

The process resulting in the production of genetically identical offspring from one parent

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2
Q

What are the advantages of sexual reproduction?

A
  • faster method of reproduction
  • only one organism is required
  • good characteristics of parent will be passed down
  • less energy required
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3
Q

What are the disadvantages of asexual reproduction?

A
  • no variation
  • genetic mutations are passed on
  • hereditary diseases are passed on
  • species cannot adapt if the environment changes
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4
Q

List four types of asexual reproduction

A
  • vegetative propagation (natural or artificial)
  • tissue culture
  • binary fission (in bacteria)
  • spore production (in fungi)
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5
Q

Describe asexual reproduction in bacteria

A

Binary fission

  • Bacterium divides into two
    • DNA replicates
    • Cell splits into two
    • Each cell grows bigger and is now identical to the parent
  • The generation time is the time taken for a cell to divide into two
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6
Q

Describe asexual reproduction in fungi

A

Spore production

  • Spores land on a food source and produce a network of threads (the threads are hyphae, the network is the mycelium)
  • Vertical hyphae grow up and form a tip called a sporangium/spore capsule
  • This has many nuclei which become spores
  • Each spore contains cytoplasm and one or more nuclei, depending on the species

Also: see classification - fungi

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7
Q

Describe asexual reproduction in potatoes

A

Tuber formation

  • A potato plant starts as a lateral bud (seed) under the soil.
  • In favorable conditions, a shoot grows out from the bud vertically, which then becomes the stem of the plant above the soil. Roots also grow out of the bud downwards into the soil. The bud is now a plant.
  • The stem then grows a part of it under the soil, which is called underground stem. Swellings start to grow from the underground stem; these swellings are called tubers which are the new potatoes. Glucose formed by photosynthesis in the leaves of the above ground stem is converted into sucrose and transported down the stem to the tubers to be stored there as starch.
  • When the tubers are fully grown the mother plant dies and the new lateral buds form on the tubers. These buds then grow into new potato plants identical to the mother plant.
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8
Q

Define

sexual reproduction

A

Sexual reproduction is a process where two haploid nuclei (gametes) fuse to make a diploid zygote of genetically dissimilar offspring.

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9
Q

What are the advantages of sexual reproduction?

A
  • variation is possible as each new organism receives a different set of genes from the two parent organisms
  • offspring may not inherit harmful genes
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10
Q

What are the disadvantages of sexual reproduction?

A
  • slower method of reproduction
  • requires two organisms/parents
  • some combinations of genes may produce less successful individuals
  • not always reliable
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11
Q

What is the function of the petals?

A

Attracts pollinators, e.g. bees and animals, as they are colourful and scented.

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12
Q

What is the stamen?

A

The male reproductive organ containing the anther and filament.

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13
Q

What is the function of the anther?

A

Produces pollen grains.

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14
Q

What is the function of the filament?

A

Holds the anther in a favourable position.

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15
Q

What is the carpel?

A

The female reproductive organ containing the stigma, style and ovary.

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16
Q

What is the function of the stigma?

A

Receives the pollen grain. It may be sticky or have hairs/spikes to hold the pollen in place.

17
Q

What is the function of the style?

A

Holds the stigma in a favourable position. It connects the stigma and ovary, providing a passage the the pollen tube can grow down.

18
Q

What is the function of the ovary?

A

Produces and contains ovules and egg cells.

19
Q

What is the function of the ovule?

A

Produces the egg cell.

20
Q

What is the function of the nectary?

A

Produces nectar to attract pollinators, e.g. bees.

21
Q

What is the function of the sepals?

A

Protect the flower when it is in the bud stage. It also undergoes photosynthesis.

22
Q

Define

pollination

A

The transfer of pollen grains from the male part of the plant (anther of stamen) to the female part of the plant (stigma).

23
Q

What is the difference between self-pollination and cross-pollination?

A

Self-pollination:

The pollen grain transfers from the anther to the stigma of the same flower.

Cross-pollination:

The pollen grain transfers from the anther to the stigma of a different flower of the same species.

24
Q

What is self-pollination preferable to cross-pollination?

A

Cross-pollination increases variation as the genes of different plants are combined, which increases the chance of the species’ survival as some plants will be able to adapt to a changing environment.

25
Q

What methods may plants use to encourage cross-pollination?

A
  • The stigma may grow taller than the stamens so pollen cannot fall onto it.
  • The stigma and anthers can mature at different times.
  • The plant can have different flowers for male and female parts.
26
Q

How are insect-pollinated plants adapted in terms of the following characteristics?

  • Petals
  • Scent and nectar
  • Number of pollen grains
  • Pollen grains
  • Anthers
  • Stigma
A
  • Petals are large and brightly coloured to attract insects
  • Usually scented and with nectar to attract insects
  • Moderate number of pollen grains (insects transfer pollen grains efficiently)
  • Sticky or spiky pollen grains (stick to insects well)
  • Anthers are inside flower, stiff and firmly attached to brush against insects
  • Stigma is inside flower and sticky, so pollen grains stick when an insect brushes past
27
Q

How are wind-pollinated plants adapted in terms of the following characteristics?

  • Petals
  • Scent and nectar
  • Number of pollen grains
  • Pollen grains
  • Anthers
  • Stigma
A
  • Small petals, often dark green or brown (no need to attract insects)
  • No scent or nectar
  • Large amounts of pollen, as most are not tranferred to another flower
  • Smooth and light pollen grains (easily carried by wind and won’t clump together)
  • Anthers hang outside flower, loose on long filaments (more anthers than on insect-pollinated flowers)
  • Hairy/feathery stigmas hang outside flower, forming a network to catch drifting pollen grains.
28
Q

What stimulates the pollen tube to grow when it is on the stigma?

A

Chemicals (lipids, sucrose) at the surface of the stigma stimulate the pollen grain to grow a pollen tube.

This attraction to chemicals is known as chemotaxis.

29
Q

How does the pollen tube grow down through the style?

A

This starts by the stigma secreting chemicals that start a pollen tube. At the tip of the pollen tube, enzymes are secreted that digest the tissue of the style digging the pollen tube further down till it opens on the other end in the ovule. The growth of the tube is controlled by a tube nucleus at the tip of the tube. The male gamete enters the pollen tube and starts its journey downwards to the micropyle of the ovule.

30
Q

Why do pollen grains only produce tubes in flowers of their own species?

A

This is because the pollen tube will only grow with the right chemicals on the stigma. If a pollen grain falls on the stigma of a flower of a different species, the stigma will not secrete the chemicals to start a pollen tube and fertilization fails.

31
Q

When does fertilisation occur?

A

After the pollen tube is grown and the nucleus of the male gamete fuses with the nucleus of the female gamete in the ovule.

32
Q

What type of division occurs to produce an embryo plant from the diploid zygote formed after fertilisation?

A

Mitosis

33
Q

Which parts of the plant wither away after fertilisation?

A
  • petals
  • sepals
  • stamens
  • stigma & style
34
Q

What happens to the parts of the plant that do not wither away after fertilisation?

A
  • Egg cell becomes the zygote
  • Ovule becomes the seed
  • Ovary becomes the fruit
35
Q

How does a seed become dormant?

A

A seed becomes dormant when it is dry and the enzymes are deactivated. The seed is metabolically inactive and can survive for a long period of time.

36
Q

What are the four mechanisms of seed dispersal?

A
  1. Wind (e.g. sycamore has wings and is light)
  2. Water (e.g. coconut is hollow and has a waterproof case and fibres to make it buoyant)
  3. Animals (e.g. blackberry gets eaten and egested, burdock has hooks to attach to fur)
  4. Mechanical/Explosion (e..g. lupin dries unevenly and splits open)
37
Q

Why do seeds need to be dispersed away from the parent plant?

A
  • reduce competition for water, sunlight and mineral salts
  • reduce overcrowding
  • colonise new areas

However, a seed may land in an area unsuitable for its growth, and there may not be other plants nearby to fertilise it when it is grown.

38
Q

Label parts A - E

A
  • A: radicle - root
  • B: micropyle - small hole through which pollen tube entered, important route for water and oxygen entry
  • C: plumule - shoot
  • D: cotyledon - food reserves with starch
  • E: testa - tough seed coat, protective layer